Multicolor Emitting Carbon Dot-Reinforced Pva Composites as Edible Food Packaging Films and Coatings With Antimicrobial and Uv-Blocking Properties

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Date

2022

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

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No
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Top 1%
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Top 10%
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Abstract

Active food packaging has become attractive because of the possibility to provide a longer shelf-life by loading functional agents into the packages to maintain the quality of food products. Herein, photoluminescent and transparent polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)-based composites embedding multicolor fluorescent carbon dots (CD/PVA) were prepared by the solvent casting method. The prepared CDs emit a strong and stable fluorescence in solution while the CD/PVA composite films were transparent, flexible, and showed UV-blocking activity with a strong fluorescence emission. Blue color-emitting CDs showed the highest UV blockage at UVA (87.04%), UVB (87.04%), and UVC (92.22%) regions while PVA alone absorbed only less than 25% of the light in all UV regions. UV blockage capacity was shown to be decreased by half, in line with the emission color shift from blue to red. Thermal properties of the PVA film were improved by the addition of CDs to the polymer, and in vitro cell viability tests showed that none of the CDs were cytotoxic against the human lung fibroblast healthy cell line (MRC-F cells) when integrated into the PVA. The antimicrobial activity of CD/PVA nanofilms was qualitatively determined. The prepared films exhibited good antimicrobial activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria with mild antioxidant and metal chelating activity, and significant inhibition of biofilm formation with a strong link with emitted color and the concentration of the composites. Green- and red-emitting CD/PVA with the highest antimicrobial activity were then analyzed and compared with the plane PVA employing their effect on the shelf-life of strawberries as a model for perishable foods. Fresh strawberries dip coated with CD/PVA and PVA were monitored over time, and virtual evaluations showed that CDs/PVA film coating resulted in reduced weight and moisture loss and significantly inhibited the fungal growth and spoiling for over 6 days at RT and 12 days at fridge conditions maintaining the visual appearance and natural color of the fruit. The findings in this work indicated the potential of reported CD as non-cytotoxic, UV-blocking antimicrobial additives for the development of edible coatings and packages for their use in the food industry, as well as pharmaceutical and healthcare applications.

Description

This study was supported by the 2019-2-TP3-3599 BAP Project of Mersin University.

Keywords

Carbon dots, Food packaging, Antimicrobial activity, Polyvinyl alcohols, 571

Fields of Science

02 engineering and technology, 0210 nano-technology

Citation

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
45

Source

ACS Omega

Volume

7

Issue

34

Start Page

29967

End Page

29983
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CrossRef : 4

Scopus : 81

PubMed : 7

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Mendeley Readers : 160

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82

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Web of Science™ Citations

76

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Page Views

442

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Downloads

518

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